Fire or Ice Radiofrequency or cryo ablation

Transcription

Fire or Ice Radiofrequency or cryo ablation
IDSS Tel Aviv 2015
Fire or Ice
Radiofrequency or cryo ablation
Gerhard Hindricks
University of Leipzig
- Heart Center Dept. of Electrophysiology
Presenter Disclosure Information
Gerhard Hindricks/Department of Electrophysiology has received scientific grants
and research grants through the University Leipzig / Heart Center from German
Heart Foundation, ProCordis Foundation, St. Jude Medical, Biotronik, Boston
Scientific, and Volkswagen Foundation.
No personal financial relation to disclose.
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Current role of point-by-point RF ablation
• point-by-point RF ablation is standard of care for
 AV-nodal reentrant tachycardia
 tachycardia due to accessory pathway
 ectopic atrial tachycardia
 typical and atypical atrial flutter
 ventricular arrhythmia
• RF ablation is the most frequent technology for
 catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
PV-devices and alternative energy sources
Cryo-Balloon
Cardiofocus
Mesh-Ablator
Ablation
Frontiers
?
highly
complex,
no benefits
10% PVI
rate
40% silent
stroke
HIFU
complications
incl. death
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
PV ablation devices and energy: What counts ?
• Conceptual aspects and ablation strategies
• Procedural aspects (duration, fluoro time ...)
• Safety and Efficacy
• Development of future technologies
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
PV ablation devices and energy: What counts ?
• Conceptual aspects and ablation strategies
• Procedural aspects (duration, fluoro time ...)
• Safety and Efficacy
• Development of future technologies
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
PV devices: One size fits all ?
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
PV devices: Level of PV isolation
• 14 pat. with AF ablation devices (cryo, laser, HIFU)
• 3D voltage map before and after ablation
Reddy et al.; Heart Rhythm 2008
• level of PV isolation was
– distal within the PV antrum (segmental position)
– AF substrate within the PV antrum untreated
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
PV ablation devices and energy: What counts ?
• Conceptual aspects and ablation strategies
• Procedural aspects (duration, fluoro time ...)
• Safety and Efficacy
• Development of future technologies
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Ablation strategies to approach AF: Changing paradigms
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
PV-isolation
activation maps
entrainment maps
substrate maps
CFAE maps
rotor maps
HD maps
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
distal PVI
- no
- no
- no
- no
- no
- no
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
New technologies will furhter improve RF ablation
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Carto 1
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Substrate-based AF ablation strategies
Rolf S et al.; Circulation AE 2014, in press
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Substrate-based AF ablation strategies
Rolf S et al.; Circulation AE 2014, in press
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Substrate-based AF ablation strategies
Rolf S et al.; Circulation AE 2014, in press
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
MRT around fossa ovalis
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
MRT around fossa ovalis
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
MRT around fossa ovalis
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Assumption one:
• Cryo balloon ablation ablation is as effective as
radiofrequency ablation......
• This has never been shown by means of a
prospective randomized study performed in centers
that are experienced in the use of point-by-point RF
ablation......even not for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation.
For substrate driven AF, cryo ablation is absolutely
ineffective.
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Non-randomized comparison of Cryo vs RF-ablation
Mubnai G et al., Am J Cardiol 2014
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Randomized comparison of Cryo vs RF re-ablations
Pokushalov I et al., JCE 2013
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Randomized comparison of Cryo vs RF re-ablations
Pokushalov I et al., JCE 2013
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Assumption two:
• Cryo balloon ablation ablation is as safe or even
safer as compared radiofrequency ablation......
• No data support this assumption. Reported data
indicate that complication rates may be higher as
compared RF ablation. Let´s look to the data.....
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Cryo ablation and complicatons: the reality
Packer et al., JACC 2013
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Cryo ablation and complicatons: the reality
Schmidt B et al., JCE 2014
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Assumption three:
• Atrio-esophageal fistula does not occur after cryo
ablation.
• Unfortunately this is not true. Severe esophageal
injury as well as perforation with atrio-esophagal
fistula has been reported.
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Assumption four:
• Cryo balloon ablation ablation is faster than
radiofrequency ablation......
n=
2850
905
Schmidt B et al., JCE 2014
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Cryo-energy versus RF energy
• Prospective randomized studies have compared the
efficacy and safety of cryo-energy and
radiofrequency energy in the setting of
- typical atrial flutter (3 studies)
- AV-nodal reentrant tachycardia (2 studies)
• all studies confirmed superiority of radiofrequency
energy as compared to cryo energy.
• Key finding: higher recurrence rate with cryo,
same complication rate!
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Cryoenergy versus RF energy
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Catheter ablation at Heart Center Leipzig
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Cryoballoon versus RF energy
•
Cryo
RF
all types of AF
no
yes
individualized ablation
no
yes
antral ablation
no
yes
mapping capabilities
no
yes
concomitant flutter ablation
right atrium
left atrium
no
no
yes
yes
non fluoroscopic navigation no
yes
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Workflow for FIRM ablation
Sommer et al.; JCE 2015
LA map – geometry and voltage
MRI-guided AF ablation
Fire or Ice for AF ablation
Should cryo ablation be first line treatment for PAF?
• Why did cryo ablation not evolve as a key ablation strategy in
true high volume ablation centers?
• Because it is less effective, takes longer, and is more
expensive as compared to RF ablation.
• Point-by-point RF ablation does
• enable individualized treatment of anatomy and substrate
• enable safer and more efficacious lesion deployment
• enable innovative 3D/4D catheter navigation
• lead to procedures with
• with procedure duration < 120 min
• with fluoroscopy time < 10 min
• with clinical efficacy > 80% in PAF